On Fri, 27 Feb 2009 04:47:09 +0100, bqz69 wrote: > It is still quite difficult to use and setup for normal people.
More details would help :P. In Gentoo Linux, I do "emerge freenet", and *done*. I have a running node ready to surf--err, maybe a quick wizard first :P. In Window$, I assume, you download the installer ball, double-click it, click Next a zillion times (as with any other installation), then you're done? So, if you're talking about the actual installation, how much easier would you like it to be? Have Micro$oft pre-package their OS with it? (I'm sure there are Linux distros that already do :P). If you mean using 3rd party programs on top of Freenet, well, that's a 3rd party issue :). But, again, you'll have to be more specific. I think you're /actually/ just frustrated that more people aren't using it yet, and need something to blame that on :P. I think tor is harder to setup and use, yet many more people seem to be using it. It could just be good (bad) ol' marketing--ie. tor has EFF behind it. Or perhaps most people don't yet see the benefits of the freenet approach, which does have substantial costs--slower surfing, more system resource load, until recently it required binary blobs (jvm), etc--in which case more government repression would certainly help us :). And since that is the natural inevitable cource of any coercive state, the future looks bright for freenet! _______________________________________________ Support mailing list Support@freenetproject.org http://news.gmane.org/gmane.network.freenet.support Unsubscribe at http://emu.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/support Or mailto:support-requ...@freenetproject.org?subject=unsubscribe